Fathom - AI Notetaker | REMOTE (must work US hours) | Full time | https://fathom.video
We make the number one AI Notetaker and are hiring across the stack (rails/typescript/go/k8s/gcp).
About Fathom: • YC W'21, raised Series A this summer, ~50 employees • Growing 10-20% every month (ARR + Usage) • 82 NPS, #1 app on both G2 + Zoom marketplace, 10k+ installs on HubSpot marketplace
Team makeup + culture: • Low ego, high integrity, highly collaborative, hard working • Senior team (10 eng), many have worked together at previous companies • Remote but synchronous. Multiple team offsites per year
This IS for you if: • You want to work on a product people love • You like highly talented, experienced coworkers • You prefer working hard and making pragmatic decisions that keep the team shipping quickly
This is NOT for you if: • You want rest & vest • Sprint planning is your favorite • You being right is more important than the team being right
If interested, apply for roles here. Mention you’ve come from HN in the application!
SerpApi | https://serpapi.com | Junior to Senior Fullstack Engineer positions | Customer Success Engineer | and more... | Based in Austin, TX but remote-first structure | Full-time | FULLY REMOTE or ONSITE | $150K - 180K a year 1099 for US or local avg + 20% for outside the US
SerpApi is the leading API to scrape and parse search engine results. We deeply support Google, Google Maps, Google Images, Bing, Baidu, and a lot more.
We are still hiring - we have so much work and we're after great people to help out! I only started at SerpApi late last year myself and can't recommend it enough.
We do continuous integration, continuous deployments, code reviews, code pairings, profit sharing, and most of communication is async via GitHub.
Our current stack is Ruby, Rails, MongoDB, and React.JS. We are looking for more Junior and Senior FullStack Engineers. We have an awesome work environment: We are a remote first company (before Covid!).
We very strongly value transparency, do open books, have a public roadmap, and contribute to the EFF.
When you apply, please mention that you saw David's post on HackerNews.
If you've previously applied and didn't make it through, please feel free to reapply if it's been a while and you think you would make a better fit than previously.
You can contact me at david at serpapi.com if it's been a few days and you think your application may have fallen through the cracks.
There's a markdown renderer which can extract code samples, a code sample viewer, and a tool to do the tmux handling and this all uses things like fzf and simple tools like simonw's llm. It's all I/O so it's all swappable.
It sits adjacent and you can go back and forth, using the chat when you need to but not doing everything through it.
You can also make it go away and then when it comes back it's the same context so you're not starting over.
Since I offload the actual llm loop, you can use whatever you want. The hooks are at the interface and parsing level.
When rendering the markdown, streamdown saves the code blocks as null-delimited chunks in the configurable /tmp/sd/savebrace. This allows things like xargs, fzf, or a suite of unix tools to manipulate it in sophisticated chains.
Again, it's not a package, it's an open architecture.
I know I don't have a slick pitch site but it's intentionally dispersive like Unix is supposed to be.
It's ready to go, just ask me. Everyone I've shown in person has followed up with things like "This has changed my life".
I'm trying to make llm workflow components. The WIMP of the LLM era. Things that are flexible, primitive in a good way, and also very easy to use.
Bug reports, contributions, and even opinionated designers are highly encouraged!
I have a very similar setup but with HLedger[1]. A "do-nothing"[2] script helps me download statements by opening bank websites, waits for manual import and finally checks balances. That makes it a lot less repetitive and error prone. Or at least, I catch the errors faster.
I've found HLedger and Shake to be fast enough to process almost a decade of finances. Dmitry Astapov has an extremely well produced tutorial workflow[3].
How have you managed the PDF parsing? Mine has become a bit of a mess dealing with slight variations in formatting as they change over time. I've been considering using LLMs but have been nervous about quality.
Howdy! APM Help is silently one of the largest SFR (single family rental) operators in America with over 300k units we help manage. We see ourselves becoming the operations layer (back office) of every local (boots on the ground) property manager in America. We have big challenges we think can be solved with tech/automation/AI in the areas of leasing, accounting, maintenance, finance, insurance, and compliance because every single rental unit is effectively a small business.
We're effectively bootstrapped ($7M+ ARR), cash flow positive, operating close to the Rule of 60 and we're looking for engineers who are maybe tired of the hype and wanting to solve real fundamental problems in housing in America.
Email me directly with more than just a resume if interested! taylor at apmhelp dot com
Side note - we're very happy with international engineers but if you come to me asking for a US engineer comp, it takes away the primary reason why we'd consider international in the first place.
ProPublica | Senior Engineer, Web and Publishing Products | Remote (US only) | Full-time
ProPublica is an independent, nonprofit newsroom that produces investigative journalism in the public interest.
We're looking for a full-stack senior product engineer to lead work on our publishing systems and core website. The right candidate will believe in our mission and thrive in a multifaceted role, contributing both to the long-term product road map and to hands-on development. Our CMS is PHP-based but we extensively use Python and Typescript across our internal systems.
Also, you'll be helping to speak against abuses of power and potentially protecting our democracy. Feeling good about that is a prerequisite to taking the position.
Prophet Town | Full-Stack Engineer + PM + DevOps/Infra | USA-ONLY REMOTE | Full-time | $240K-$370K annual total comp | English fluency required
I’m the founder, trying to do “enlightened business.” We are a small, fully-remote, sf-bay-area-based, boutique indie tech agency. Our leadership staff are all ex-Fortune 100; everybody codes. Notable recent projects: voltagepark.com and a slackbot for Anduril’s employees.
Unlike earlier HN Who's Hiring posts, we have specific existing clients in mind: total comp is not flexible hourly, but full-time salary with client-tied equity compensation. We are currently filling “Tier 3” (5-10 y/o/e, $240K-$320K annual comp) and "Tier 4" (7-20 y/o/e, $300K-$370K annual total comp) roles:
Engineers: Full stack polyglot but JS/TS heavy (SQL/NextJS/Node/React/Remix), AWS deployments.
Infra+Devops: Kubernetes/Docker, Terraform, AWS service set, common CI/CD options.
PMs: JIRA/Trello, stakeholder wrangling, proof of winning engineer trust and surviving big-org politics.
We’re a worker-first operation. Applicants must meet a high bar; in return, I pledge my personal commitment to finding you interesting work and getting you good pay.
Contact James: hn-hiring@ptown.tech. We are a small shop and can get swamped; nonetheless if you send us something by Friday Oct 4, you will hear something by Saturday Oct 5. Please make sure to include a resume in pdf format, and clarify which of the three positions you are interested in.
UPDATE: we took a snapshot of all responses we had received by 10 pm Pacific on Oct 4, and have sent out an initial email to all applicants. There are quite a lot of you :). Additional applicants may still respond, but we will prioritize first responding to those who had already submitted by our snapshot time.
FrontRow is revolutionizing how creators launch content and global audiences consume it. We're building the next generation of creator-focused platforms for video streaming and OTT.
Requirements:
• 4+ years experience as a backend engineer
• Proficiency in statically typed server-side languages (Go, Rust, Java)
• Experience with relational databases (Postgres, MySQL)
• Strong understanding of algorithms, data structures, and API design
• Excellent communication and collaboration skills
• Ability to work during core business hours in US time zones
Bonus:
• Experience with video streaming or OTT platforms
• GraphQL expertise
• DevOps knowledge
You'll be:
• Architecting and implementing scalable backend systems
• Collaborating with cross-functional teams
• Balancing short-term deliverables with long-term vision
• Writing efficient, testable code
• Maintaining high development standards
Compensation: $150k – $200k • 0.0% – 0.2% equity
We're proud to be an Equal Opportunity Employer. We do not offer visa sponsorship at this time.
Doctors are overworked, burnt out, and are quitting in masses.
I'm head of engineering at Freed, where we combine clinician love with the latest AI tech and intense execution to create products that make clinicians happier.
Our first product is an AI scribe that automates medical documentation. In 1 year we:
- Acquired 10,000 paying and loving clinicians and exceeded $11M ARR
- Generated 70,000 patient notes daily using ASR and LLMs
With the backing of the best VCs in the world, we are rapidly expanding our product offering. Patient facing assistant, patient insights, EHR integrations, and other products are being built and used by thousands of clinicians and millions of patients.
Our engineering culture emphasizes speed, end-to-end ownership, responsibility, and independence. Our tech stack is React and TypeScript / Node.js.
Column (https://column.com/) | Software Eng (Infrastructure), Software Eng (Backend), Software Eng (Product) | San Francisco, CA (ONSITE) | Full Time
Column is the first nationally chartered bank built from the ground up for developers. We provide an API first, modern banking experience for our customers, replacing the bloated middleware and legacy software that currently powers most financial companies.
Started by the co-founder of Plaid, Column has a team of <10 experienced engineers and is currently processing hundreds of billions in payments annually, supporting some of the largest and most sophisticated fintech companies. We are looking for ambitious infrastructure, product, and backend engineers that want to build the best-in-class banking tech from first principles. We all work on high impact, independently driven projects - writing code for regulated financial infrastructure at scale.
We are looking for candidates that are excited to join us on a mission to raise the standard of trust online. All of our roles are fully-remote, except where specific locations are noted.
Our goal is to build crypto developer tools that bring millions of developers and billions of users into crypto (today, crypto has <50k active developers). If you're a developer, our job is to make it simple to build products, while providing the trust, scale, and usability that users depend on Coinbase on. Our teams work directly with our CEO (Brian Armstrong, YC S12).
We're looking for three sets of roles:
- Full stack engs for our Developer Platform Portal, Commerce, and Staking teams
- You have a passion for crypto (even if you're new to the space)
- You care deeply about developer experience (geeking out about things like SDK design)
- We move at the pace of a startup, with value to full stack skillset, shipping fast, total ownership
- Senior Product Manager, ex-engineer, who has built API products before and written documentation
Use what you know, what you are efficient with, what you like to use.
I would use Laravel
1) Auth
You can create your Laravel app choosing (Vue + Inertia) or (Livewire) and have auth, 2FA and a profile dashboard in a few minutes, with Laravel Socialite package you can quickly add single sign on with Google Auth, GitHub, Octa, dozens of options. Oauth with Laravel Passport.
2) Simple user dashboard with live updates. I prefer Livewire or you can use View + Inertia these would have been installed in the previous step. You can also use Laravel Nova, or Filament to speed things along building a dashboard.
3) Blog I would run this standalone from the app and use Statamic, Next js or just html + tailwind css depending on the complexity
Laravel Ecosystem
Herd - macOS app that makes setting up your local dev environment instant.
Jetstream - Start a new project with auth and team management.
Telescope - debugging and insight UI
Scout - Lightening fast full text search
Echo - WebSockets
Cashier - Stripe and Paddle Subscriptions
Envoyer - Zero Down Time Deployments
Forge - Server creation and management (EC2)
Vapor - Serverless Creation and management
Horizon - Redis Queue Monitoring
Pennant - feature flags
Sail - Local Docker
Socialite - Social Auth Google, Facebook, GitHub (tons of drivers)
Sanctum - API and mobile auth
Pint - Code style fixer
Dusk - Automated browser testing
Inertia - SPA with server side routing
Livewire - Dynamic server side apps. (Similar to Rails/Hotwire)
And those are just some of the first party packages and tools.
There are well maintained Laravel packages for almost everything else you need.
And working with Laravel is the best developer experience.
Delaware is definitely not the cheapest or even in contention for the cheapest.
Still, if you want to raise capital, the correct answer is DE C Corp. If you're not looking for external funding, any state will do. If you care about anonymity, do Nevada or Wyoming. If you don't care about anonymity, Colorado is actually a very good choice. Very simple, intuitive online filing system that accepts filings instantaneously. Filing fees as cheap as anywhere in the country. No need for an attorney (or LegalZoom or some other random service) unless you just don't feel like dealing with it.
Costs will likely be $50 to file, Registered Agent (as cheap as $30 per annum), and $10 periodic report fee annually every year you're in business. Colorado is even nice enough to send plenty of reminders on when to file that report if you give them an email address.
Since you're a US citizen, my instinct would be LLC taxed as an S corp. But confirm with your accountant!
What about partnering with a frontend person on a % of future profits basis? Maybe going to some dev/JS meetups and pitch your ideas there?
Depending on what exactly you're trying to launch, it may only take a few hours/days of work. If it's interesting in its own right, does some community good, or even just has a good risk/reward ratio (i.e. the frontend person puts in a few hours of work upfront for the potential of X% later on), you might get a few bites.
As a former full-stack dev now focused on the frontend, I'm in a similar (but reversed) situation... I don't enjoy working on backend stuff, but frontend side projects are very quick to whip up for me (can get a page up and running in a couple minutes, a workable prototype in an hour or two, typically).
That's largely thanks to recent startups like Vercel, Netlify, Gatsby, Remix, Astro, etc. that have taken it upon themselves to improve the frontend (at least JS/React) developer experience. The vendor support adds a LOT of quality-of-life such that it's no longer as difficult as it was 3-5 years ago to spin up new MVPs.
As an example, my stack is often:
- Vercel for hosting, because they take a Git repo and host it for you in a couple clicks and manage everything. Free or cheap ($20/mo) at MVP stage.
- Next.js (Vercel's open-source React framework) will handle frontend tooling, routing, type checking, and linting for you with a single command (`npx create-next-app`). Starting the server is one more command (`next dev`) and your page is up and running.
- For the UI layer, I'd recommend either starting with one of their prebuilt templates (https://vercel.com/templates/next.js) and modifying it as needed
OR using a modern component system like https://mui.com/ or https://ant.design/ or https://chakra-ui.com/ instead of trying to learn and write your own component and JS+CSS code. Using one of these systems will allow you to compose complex apps out of well-made, well-documented, easy-to-use primitives, making it much easier to focus on business needs rather than basic frontend components and infra.
The basic MUI system, for example, is totally free. You can find third-party apps built on top of it (https://mui.com/store/#populars) and pay a one-time license fee to essentially "fork" them, getting a prebuilt working app that you just attach your backend API calls to.
There are also low-code extensions of these frameworks (meaning you start with a GUI, plan out your app that way, but still have access to the source for future advanced changes). One example is https://mui.com/toolpad/
----------------------
Is this a lot? Yes and no. React has a learning curve of its own, but it can take the place of having to learn raw HTML and CSS. (Yes, you eventually should know those things for debugging and polishing, but they are largely a level of abstraction below what you really need for a basic MVP).
Once you learn React, its primary value isn't that it's a great language (opinions differ) but that it has a humongous ecosystem of third-party vendors, free open-source libraries (basically any component you might think to build is probably already available on npm), and a wide availability of devs from hobbyists to full-timers.
Others in this topic will suggest going away from Javascript as much as possible (and using things like HTMX or backend-to-HTML solutions like the old days). That's fine, but you lose out on the rich ecosystem of React and Javascript, so you end up having to build more yourself -- which is what you're trying to avoid in your case.
My own 2¢: As someone who grew up with HTML and made websites since the birth of Javascript and CSS, the web has always been messy. It's always been a semi-open ecosystem controlled by a few major companies (whether that's Netscape or Microsoft or Sun or Adobe, or these days Google and Apple), so it very much suffers from design-by-bullying. Whoever is the power player of the decade gets to add their favorite technologies that everyone else is forced to adopt. Thus the web became a hodgepodge of document markup systems poorly fitted for modern apps, with various hacks on top of hacks built to satisfy some big company or another's in-house needs. Sadly, that means going "vanilla HTML+JS" doesn't leave you with much, just the shattered legacy of poor historical decisions.
React at least helps by encouraging componentization and abstraction of UI elements to functions, using cleaner data models (actual variables and objects) vs direct DOM manipulation (using page content as a store of state).
We've gone through many generational shifts in approach, from the raw HTML days of Geocities to the you-build-it, we-host-it approach of Godaddy and its ilk, to the "all in one" CMSes like Wordpress or Drupal. These days, (if you want there to be), there can be a pretty clear separation between backend and frontend systems, and with that specialization came a bunch of startups (mentioned above) whose approach is "let us help you build it as best as we can, so you can focus on business logic instead of basic UI and infra". After 20 years of doing this, the current state of the web developer experience is actually my favorite so far. HTML and CSS suck for building apps (as opposed to documents), and although Javascript is a lot better since ECMAscript v6 (ES6), it is still inextricably tied to the DOM (and thus HTML elements) unless you use an abstraction like React.
It's the difference between writing something like:
```
(Where it'll look good enough out of the box, plus give you filtering and sorting etc. for free, all with good documentation and support)
vs writing your own table generator, HTML and CSS for every cell/row/column. Could you do that? Sure. All the modern hosts will still support that sort of document. It's just a pain to write and maintain.
> One general point. A thing I have had said to me over and over again whenever I’ve done public appearances and readings and so on in the States is this: Please don’t let anyone Americanise it! We like it the way it is!
> There are some changes in the script that simply don’t make sense. Arthur Dent is English, the setting is England, and has been in every single manifestation of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy ever. The ‘Horse and Groom’ pub that Arthur and Ford go to is an English pub, the ‘pounds’ they pay with are English (but make it twenty pounds rather than five – inflation). So why suddenly ‘Newark’ instead of ‘Rickmansworth’? And ‘Bloomingdales’ instead of ‘Marks & Spencer’? The fact that Rickmansworth is not within the continental United States doesn’t mean that it doesn’t exist! American audiences do not need to feel disturbed by the notion that places do exist outside the US or that people might suddenly refer to them in works of fiction.
Context: 3x startup founder/CEO, focusing more on impact than constant work
- Things (♥) and Reminders for todos (the latter for location based reminders or when I need to use Siri to set them), to put reminders so they are captured
- Notes end up in Dropbox Paper (for work), Mac Notes (for home, sharable within, iMessage users), Notion for specific projects
- Polymail for inbox zero, on iOS and Desktop (I'm biased, but Superhuman never stuck for me and Gmail isn't as effective, feels distracting and unintentionally designed)
- Fantastical for calendar (home, work, although I'd like to break these up more so that I can share them by project/team)
- Openphone for throwaway cell phone for orders, 2fa, etc.
- Arc for web browser
- 1Password both for work and private passwords
- News Feed Eradicator to remove/limit feed distractions on my laptop, Screen Time on iOS
- Turned off all notifications except calendar on Apple Watch
- Slack for work chat, but intentionally been spending less time here for more deep work time. Conversations seem to get more efficient if forced to happen on SMS and phone calls.
- Just bought a Remarkable, which I intend to finally use to replace carrying around paper journals for notes and journaling
- Google Suite (surprised by this, but I no longer need the MS Office Suite any more)
- Google Meet (some people make me use Zoom, but GMeet has gotten much better, no software downloads or updates, it just works and the quality is far better than it was when they launched)
- Like @ggwp99, I also plan my week either Sunday evenings or Monday mornings (I intentionally ignore email Monday mornings since people seem to volley their problems, which may not be correlated with my priorities)
- Start every day by asking the question, "what one thing would make a massive impact on my day or week or month," and start there. It's usually the thing I don't want to do.
- Workout classes 5-6 times a week, 7:30am, pick your poison... F45, Barry's whatever motivates you to leave soaked in sweat. I fought this for years since I didn't care about the superficial reasons for working out. Now I find that I am 100% energy at 9am, flushed with endorphins, and I feel better with 6 hours of sleep than I did with 9.
I am a Christian (though, that term has many inaccurate definitions). I'll look through the Wikipedia article.
You mention that the Gospels don't agree on anything except the basic narrative. We actually only need a small number of facts to agree. The Wikipedia article you linked confirms Jesus was real and he was crucified. His crucifixion fulfilled a lot of prophesy in plenty of scripture.
Jesus' resurrection is pretty hard to prove (there is no body!), but we see ancillary evidence: His followers gave up their lives for what Jesus taught. Luke-Acts was written "shortly after" the resurrection, when eye witnesses were still alive. Thomas ran off to India and started a church "before" early Christians had a chance to "fake" evidence
I agree with you that passion alone is weak- every (most?) religion has zealots. The 4 Gospels and Paul's account are first hand accounts. They heard directly from Jesus who claimed to be God. Jesus might be crazy, but the original Apostles watched Jesus ascend into heaven - and then they died pursuing what Jesus taught. Paul was passionate about persecuting Christians (note the misplaced passion!), but then Jesus visited him directly and redirected Paul's passion and faith.
People have definitely died for lesser causes. People have definitely pursued petty fights - but the decision of Jesus isn't petty - it is quite literally a decision that defines what happens after our short life here on earth.
I appreciate you sharing the Wikipedia article. I'll read through it so I can better understand you and people like you. I wholeheartedly believe that the God of the Universe made you and loves you - and I want to show you that same love.
The stock headset definitely needs to be upgraded for this kind of application.
I own a BoboVR headband with an external battery, which helps balance the weight of the headset. I had the elite strap with external battery and the BoboVR is much more comfortable for me. It’s also leatherette instead of foam, so much easier to clean.
I also have a fan (BoboVR F2) attached to the face mask in order to prevent condensation and overall I get a great experience even when I drip of sweat after exercising.
What now? There is no plan. We have the vaccine, at least in the US and EU we have enough doses, and they are more effective than many expected them to be. We are many, many days into "three weeks to slow the spread".
In Manhattan numerous restaurants constructed "outdoor dining" areas, but since eating outside in 20F weather kind of sucks (I can attest from personal experience), many are fully enclosed and have heating and A/C. They are literally indoor dining except located on the street and not built to code, but we all pretend that this is making a difference.
Everyone knows that children in schools are a major vector for disease. Pre-covid it was always parents with school-aged kids bringing in colds and flu. Everyone knows that testing is largely performed only on people showing symptoms and children do not show severe COVID symptoms, but parents got tired of having their kids at home so we got a round of articles claiming children don't spread COVID and reopened schools while everything else was shut down.
I could go on with many more examples but we all know them. The response is a joke. The lockdown largely hasn't affected the elite and wherever it has we get COVID theater and special exceptions, but it's also become political and part of the identity for a certain highly influential strata of society so we keep moving the goalposts with no plan.
The refs tab is not called branches because it is for references. We use git terminology deliberately, because it is a tool for git, and you should not be afraid of understanding your tools. On hg.sr.ht, for example, it's named differently, because Mercurial is designed differently and has different terminology.
SourceHut is not GitHub/GitLab/Gitea, and you would be ill-advised to treat it as such. I have no intention of building yet another GitHub clone. If you insist on everything having the same workflow, then what utility is there in different tools? Be prepared to challenge your preconceptions when learning how to use SourceHut. The documentation is thorough and has lots of tutorials to help you along the way:
It's a 20+ video course where you build a real world SAAS app. We build up 1 big app through out the course.
There's also 30-40+ hours worth of self guided optional assignments to add features into the application based on what you learn in each section. It's all positioned in the form of specifications, similar to how it would be when doing any type of job or contract gig.
Funny enough, many people have contacted me saying they took the course but don't even use Python and Flask. They were just experienced programmers using other web frameworks but wanted to see how the app all comes together so they can use the same patterns in their framework of choice.
It has several worked examples, including a key/value append-only database, a CPU emulator, an NTP client, a floating point implementation, multiple graphical applications, a binary files inspector and a few others!
I don’t know if it’s alright to mention my own work, but the book I wrote to teach React is project-based. It’s got a bunch of very small projects and exercises rather than a single massive one, and the later projects review concepts from the earlier ones. It’s called Pure React and it’s digital-only right now (maybe one day I’ll get it printed!) https://daveceddia.com/pure-react/
Over the course of the book you build a photo sharing application from scratch. Each chapter uses new "feature requests" from a fictional manager as a way to introduce and teach new Elm concepts.
(It's technically in Early Access because the print book hasn't hit the shelves yet, but all the chapters are finished and available in the online version.)
A Curios Moon - a data science mystery that teaches you PostgreSQL by working on projects that use real nasa data sets in a fictional setting (your role as a data science intern at red:4)
I know you specifically asked for books, but I think these are too good to not mention.
Ben Eater has a series of Youtube videos that explores how computers work, starting from first principles, and in the process you build an 8 bit computer (or a 6502 computer in a different series). He actually sells kits of the parts to build it yourself, or you can buy the parts yourself.
It’s a deep dive into how computers work, but it’s very approachable. He’s an excellent teacher, and the video format works really well for what he’s teaching - it’s hard to imagine this working as well in book form.
We make the number one AI Notetaker and are hiring across the stack (rails/typescript/go/k8s/gcp).
About Fathom: • YC W'21, raised Series A this summer, ~50 employees • Growing 10-20% every month (ARR + Usage) • 82 NPS, #1 app on both G2 + Zoom marketplace, 10k+ installs on HubSpot marketplace
Team makeup + culture: • Low ego, high integrity, highly collaborative, hard working • Senior team (10 eng), many have worked together at previous companies • Remote but synchronous. Multiple team offsites per year
This IS for you if: • You want to work on a product people love • You like highly talented, experienced coworkers • You prefer working hard and making pragmatic decisions that keep the team shipping quickly
This is NOT for you if: • You want rest & vest • Sprint planning is your favorite • You being right is more important than the team being right
If interested, apply for roles here. Mention you’ve come from HN in the application!
Apply here → https://jobs.ashbyhq.com/fathom.video